Recent Episodes
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SE Radio 668: Steve Summers on Securing Test and Measurement Equipment
May 13, 2025 – 54:32 -
SE Radio 667: Ashley Peacock on Cloudflare
May 7, 2025 – 01:04:31 -
SE Radio 666: Eran Yahav on the Tabnine AI Coding Assistant
Apr 29, 2025 – 01:02:05 -
SE Radio 665: Malcolm Matalka on Developing in OCaml with Zero Frameworks
Apr 23, 2025 – 56:10 -
SE Radio 664: Emre Baran and Alex Olivier on Stateless Decoupled Authorization Frameworks
Apr 15, 2025 – 51:54 -
SE Radio 663: Tyler Flint on Managing External APIs
Apr 8, 2025 – 52:27 -
SE Radio 662: Vlad Khononov on Balancing Coupling in Software Design
Apr 1, 2025 – 56:19 -
SE Radio 661: Sunil Mallya on Small Language Models
Mar 25, 2025 – 59:28 -
SE Radio 660: Pete Warden on TinyML
Mar 18, 2025 – 55:04 -
SE Radio 659: Brenden Matthews on Idiomatic Rust
Mar 12, 2025 – 53:54 -
SE Radio 658: Tanya Janca on Secure Coding
Mar 6, 2025 – 01:11:40 -
SE Radio 657: Hong Minhee on ActivityPub and the Fediverse
Feb 27, 2025 – 40:09 -
SE Radio 656: Ivett Ördög on Rewrite versus Refactor
Feb 20, 2025 – 49:43 -
SE Radio 655: Charles Humble on Professional Skills for Software Engineers
Feb 13, 2025 – 55:20 -
SE Radio 654: Chris Patterson on MassTransit and Event-Driven Systems
Feb 4, 2025 – 01:09:06 -
SE Radio 653: Asanka Abeysinghe on Cell-Based Architecture
Jan 30, 2025 – 01:00:06 -
SE Radio 652: Christian Mesh on OpenTofu
Jan 21, 2025 – 51:50 -
SE Radio 651: Paul Frazee on Bluesky and the AT Protocol
Jan 17, 2025 – 01:08:24 -
SE Radio 650: Robert Seacord on What's New in the C Programming Language
Jan 17, 2025 – 50:02 -
SE Radio 647: Praveen Gujar on Gen AI for Digital Ad Tech Platforms
Jan 8, 2025 – 52:01 -
SE Radio 649: Lukas Gentele on Kubernetes vClusters
Jan 2, 2025 – 58:14 -
SE Radio 648: Matthew Adams on AI Threat Modeling and Stride GPT
Dec 27, 2024 – 46:56 -
SE Radio 646: Matthew Skelton on Team Topologies
Dec 11, 2024 – 57:08 -
SE Radio 645: Vinay Tripathi on BGP Optimization
Dec 4, 2024 – 59:22 -
SE Radio 644: Tim McNamara on Error Handling in Rust
Nov 30, 2024 – 01:09:12 -
SE Radio 643: Ganesh Datta on Production Readiness
Nov 20, 2024 – 53:15 -
SE Radio 642: Simon Wijckmans on Third-Party Browser Script Security
Nov 13, 2024 – 01:07:32 -
SE Radio 641: Catherine Nelson on Machine Learning in Data Science
Nov 6, 2024 – 48:19 -
SE Radio 640: Jonathan Horvath on Physical Security
Oct 30, 2024 – 59:19 -
SE Radio 639: Cody Ebberson on Regulated Industries
Oct 23, 2024 – 39:20 -
SE Radio 638: Nick Tune and Jean-Georges Perrin on Architecture Modernization
Oct 17, 2024 – 01:01:39 -
SE Radio 637: Steve Smith on Software Quality
Oct 10, 2024 – 59:03 -
SE Radio 636: Sriram Panyam on SaaS Control Planes
Oct 2, 2024 – 01:02:23 -
SE Radio 635: Stevie Caldwell on Zero-Trust Architecture
Sep 26, 2024 – 50:21 -
SE Radio 634: Jim Bugwadia on Kubernetes Policy as Code
Sep 25, 2024 – 01:02:22 -
SE Radio 633: Itamar Friedman on Automated Testing with Generative AI
Sep 11, 2024 – 59:41 -
SE Radio 632: Goran Petrovic on Mutation Testing at Google
Sep 5, 2024 – 55:59 -
SE Radio 631: Abhay Paroha on Cloud Migration for Oil and Gas Operations
Aug 28, 2024 – 58:53 -
SE Radio 630: Luis Rodríguez on the SSH Backdoor Attack
Aug 22, 2024 – 44:00 -
SE Radio 629: Emily Bache on Katas and the Importance of Practice
Aug 13, 2024 – 51:52 -
SE Radio 628: Hans Dockter on Developer Productivity
Aug 7, 2024 – 56:46 -
SE Radio 627: Chuck Weindorf on Leaders and Software Engineers
Jul 31, 2024 – 57:07 -
SE Radio 626: Ipek Ozkaya on Gen AI for Software Architecture
Jul 23, 2024 – 59:33 -
SE Radio 625: Jonathan Schneider on Automated Refactoring with OpenRewrite
Jul 16, 2024 – 52:45 -
SE Radio 624: Marcelo Trylesinski on FastAPI
Jul 16, 2024 – 41:04 -
SE Radio 623: Michael J. Freedman on TimescaleDB
Jul 3, 2024 – 01:05:43 -
SE Radio 622: Wolf Vollprecht on Python Tooling in Rust
Jun 26, 2024 – 55:10 -
SE Radio 621: Xe Iaso on Fly.io
Jun 19, 2024 – 47:33 -
SE Radio 620: Parker Selbert and Shannon Selbert on Robust Job Processing in Elixir
Jun 12, 2024 – 59:42 -
SE Radio 619: James Strong on Kubernetes Networking
Jun 5, 2024 – 49:55
Recent Reviews
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Goodluck duckLike the format and topicsThis podcast has the things I want in a pod: 1) Interesting and varied topics with knowledgeable guests. 2) Hosts who are clearly knowledgeable, interested, and prepared for the interview. 3) Interviews are not rushed to fit an artificial schedule. I hate it when things are not given the time they deserve because they hit the 40 minute (or whatever) mark and it gets cut off. 4) It also remains chill. Everyone is interested in the discussion but not acting like they’ve had 10 cups of coffee or invented the warp drive.
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ivan.kuchinHost is lagging behind.Podcast host asking questions that are not follows conversation line. It seems to me that questions prepared before the dialog and in spite of conversation questions asked most of the time have no relation to the conversation flow.
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BarrygsterNeeds audio quality inprovementContent is a mixed bag, but even when an episode is good, the audio production quality is poor. Makes it hard to listen to at higher speeds and requires close listening that most podcasts don’t.
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SuperReviewerGuy9000Great podcastVery informative
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Pcelo.....DOPE!The drop in this music.... 👍
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JbvfgfrjfgjiGreat job at broad coverageMost software engineers I know have deep pockets of expertise, but not in every area. This podcast does a great job of providing a broad range of topics at an understandable level.
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Nick8090908Could be greatIt seems like a lot of the glowing reviews were from years ago. The episodes I have listened to so far have been uninteresting. Often the interviewer seems uninterested and asks extremely basic questions. The guest is clearly selling their product or service and it’s a shame.
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Dave J SmithMost episodes are not useful, with the occasional gemI have really enjoyed some of the episodes, such as the CAP theorem from a few years ago, but most of the episodes are not useful for an experienced engineer because they stay at the introductory level for the topic. The interviewers often have zero experience with the topic, so their questions are not helpful. It’s common for an interviewer to spend 2/3 of the show stumbling through the background to try to understand what the topic is. This may be useful for brand new developers, but it’s frustrating for experienced developers who really want to learn about a topic from an expert. Even in the best episodes, the interviewers miss important questions. The show could be 10x better with some new interviewers who ask better questions, and think more critically rather than letting the show be a marketing platform for the guest.
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marcuscreoAmazing resourceWith a deep, interesting backlog of shows that span technology and practices, I love SERadio's focus on practical topics for the "working engineer".
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OmcauleyAmazing ideasAfter listening to this podcast I feel that I could recommend this to anyone looking for interesting and new innovative ideas.
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ilmscottGreat PodcastInteresting and relevant interviews.
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arni_gudjBest software engineering podcastSo much value! This is hands down the best software engineering podcast out there.
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MrthkEssential listening for software engineers and managersThis podcast will get you up to speed on the latest thinking on all kinds of technology topics, from modern database architecture to workflow analysis to developer tools. It is technology agnostic and covers a whole range of areas that you are likely to encounter as a software engineer or manager, no matter what technologies you use day to day. Listen now!
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mgalgsThanks for not dumbing it down!Too many “technical” podcasts shy away from the nitty gritty details. I’d say Robert Blumen is the best technical podcast host around.
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listeneririnaRelevant topics for computer science studentsShows contain great information and hosts are well-prepared,The content is in depth and topics are relevant to students of computer science work. I hope to learn a lot from it.
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Moe sialGreat conversationsLove this show
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raekwon0825AwesomeThese guys know what they are talking about and deliver the content in an interesting way and enjoyable to listen to. I have learned tons that I use on my job. Highly recommend this podcast especially if you are a geek like me. Thanks guys, for all the great podcasts!!
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masterpants422Excellent Way to Convert Commute into EducuationI'm a CS undergrad with on-off industry exposure. I am currently listening to this podcast from the beginning (I'm near episode 100) to expand my knowledge beyond CS fundamentals. The hosts are great and they find great guests. They are very company-agnostic, but many episodes discuss specific technologies making it very practical. Highly recommended.
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EricLarsDeveloperThis is an excellent resource for me, a software developer, to get a sense of what is happening on a broad range of issues that I would otherwise never hear about. This podcast is interviews with mostly professional developers and covers a fair amount on software design, development, and testing methodologies, as well as software technologies. As should be expected in a niche podcast, the interviews are not always smoothly edited and the interviewees are not professional speakers, so do not always speak clearly.
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zeemoneeAmazing and Talented Show, A Must for Any Programmer or Fan of SoftwareI've been listening to all the old shows and the cast is very good and format of the show really makes it interesting. Some great interviews with prominent experts in their Software field. If you enjoy programming, do it as a profession, or just like to geek out. This show is a must.
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Some bugged guyThank you for this podcast!If you are looking to brush up on a subject or looking to keep up to date on new technology, this podcast was made for you! Thank you so much!
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patricklwVery Technical and Very GoodThis podcast is not afraid to dive into technical details which makes it a very useful podcast. It isn't always the easiest to listen to while trying to do other things due to the high amount of content packed into each episode. They've done a great job in making a podcast that can help keep software engineers up to date and learning about new things. A task that we often forget neglect in our busy lives. Definately a podcast worth your time. Thank you for making such a good podcast!
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Robert UballeSafer better world neededLove hope faith trust In god we trust
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unhillbillyPremier no-nonsense material for professionalsAnyone calling themselves a professional software engineer will benefit from this series. Managers of same will as well.
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JimmyBecBest software engineering resource on the InternetYou will learn a lot. Great show!
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CopperbackInterestingI'm a Computer Science student and SE Radio is a great source of exposure to the field.
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MikeNDallasGreat resource on modern software trendsI've listened to almost all (100+) of se-radio episodes. This is the best way to catch up with trends in software development. Highly recommended.
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DansterinoEssential for all software engineersBeing an American, I found myself straining to understand the German accented English. After the first 2 episodes, either I got over it, or they sounded better, and I have been a fan since then. If you are a software engineer and need to know the ins and outs, the acronyms, and the explanations of today's software development technology, you need to subscribe to this podcast now.
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